34 Cool Things You Can Do with Your New Vinyl Cutter

Craft & Design Digital Fabrication Paper Crafts

Advertisements for cutting plotters (aka vinyl cutters) in magazines market this technology as a distribution platform for costly design patterns, available from retail outlets as files or physical cartridges. Thatโ€™s a clash with Maker culture: We want to make our own stuff, thank you very much.

But don’t write off vinyl cutters just yet. You can accomplish a lot more with a vinyl cutter thanย the projects often highlighted in advertising associated with โ€œcraft cutters.โ€ So we pulled together some of our favorite examples, along with some alternative uses you might want to employ.

Labels and Stickers

  • Stick physical numbers or time labels right onto the table while you photograph the stages of a tutorial or other process to help you sort through the photographs later.
  • Create labels for materials, supplies, and experiments in your own idiom, from ghoulish safety warnings, to all-caps warnings like โ€œKEEP YOUR HANDS OFF MY STUFF!โ€
  • Place glow in the dark safety labels in your workshop that only reveal themselves when you flip off the lights.
Photo: Pete Prodoehl
Photo by Pete Prodoehl

Imperator Furiosa’s Skeleton Arm

Maker/Hacker/Blogger Pete Prodoehl exited a screening of Mad Max: Fury Road with a quest of his own: To produce a vinyl sticker replica of Imperator Furiosaโ€™s Skeleton Arm. He traced the image and pasted it to the driver’s door of his own war machine (and his laptop).

Electronics

  • Create acid resist patterns for your custom PCBs, and then add โ€œsilkscreenโ€ labels.
  • Use a conductive pen to plot a circuit in low-resistance silver.
  • Cut thin foil traces, PCB layers, and RFF interference protection for your paper circuits.
  • Create your own DIY sticker circuits, from blinking โ€œLED stickiesโ€ to handy ad-hoc breakouts for your Arduino or Raspberry Pi prototyping.

Woodworking, Craft, and Painting

  • Create and place trim markers on plywood, MDF, acrylic, or hardwoods on-site where the project will be delivered, and then transport the materials to a better-furnished woodshop for cutting, sanding, and painting.
  • Create edge boundaries and resist patterns to take some of the terror out of painting, staining, and coating.
  • Remind yourself of the part ID and rotation when producing a massive assembly project on a CNC, laser cutter, or chopsaw. (Peel and discard when the project is assembled.)
  • Prepare stencil vinyls and plastic sheets suited to the specific water-based or solvent-based paints you will be using.
  • Create stencils and resist layers for chemical etching or sandblasting on wood, glass, acrylic, or metal sheets.

Paper Engineering

  • Cut, crease, score, and perforate papers, cardstocks, and thin plastics to create elaborate kirigami, origami, and other paper craft projects.
  • Cut and score the top layer of thin foam core or cardboard to produce instant foldable 3D objects.
  • Add fragments of paper or translucent acetate to produce colorful paper or plywood lanterns.
Photo: Natasha Dzurny
Photo by Natasha Dzurny

Light My Heart

Papercircuit designer Natasha Dzurny creates pop-up greeting cards with paper circuits like this Valentine’s Day card (and many more).

Prototypes and Project Decorations

  • Produce foam or stiff paper prototypes of product designs or scale models of buildings.
  • Test ambitious CNC and laser cuts in miniature before executing on large or costly materials.
  • Add text, weathering, decals, and patches of color to your 3D printed scale replicas.
  • Add tiny text and embellishment details onto 3D printed replica props that are too small and fussy to produce using your printer.
  • Sometimes the best cuts are hidden. Double-stick adhesive sheets securely attach embellishments to your projects, or attach your projects to walls and tables and other things.

Custom Apparel

  • Launch your next project “in character” with outfits bearing the logo, name, and purpose of your invention.
  • Create team shirts for your First Robotics team, hackerspace, or classroom.
  • Transfer any design or illustration you dream up to tshirts, totes, and temporary tattoos.

silkscreen

Simple Silk-Screen Printing

Educator and Make contributor Chris Connors shared this project in issue 36, demonstrating how to use a vinyl sticker as the mask for a DIY silkscreen project.

Homes, Schools, Hackerspaces, and More

  • Create removable vinyl wallpaper patterns on your own time and whims.
  • Add frosting or translucent blocking to window glass or acrylic laser cut projects without the messiness of acid etching/sandblasting equipment.
  • Enlarge a thoughtful handwritten note into an epic wall decoration.
  • Vectorize photographs of members of your class, team, or hackerspace. Use a marking tool in your machine to sketch portraits to hang in the space. Run the files again to produce another copy to send home with the subject of each drawing.
  • Create labels with magnetic backing material to mark who is “In”, “Out”, or who should “Clean the Bathroom.”
  • Add a permanent wall shadow to a present or missing object.
  • Cut the panels and silhouette shapes for elaborate interactive shadow boxes.
  • Make your own museum-style wall text and stick it up next to something you appreciate as art.
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